Survey Shows Workers Often Go to Work Sick

Wakefield Research survey shows workers often go to work sick. Reports indicate more than 80 percent of illnesses are transmitted by the hands, a key to how illness-causing germs can spread quickly in an office. For more surprising facts about how ...
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Wakefield Research survey shows workers often go to work sick. Reports indicate more than 80 percent of illnesses are transmitted by the hands, a key to how illness-causing germs can spread quickly in an office. For more surprising facts about how Americans handle illness during cold and flu season, view our infographic, Germ Alert: Your Co-Worker Might Not Call In Sick.

GOJO Industries

AKRON, Ohio, Jan. 12, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- For most of the country, the winter months often bring colder temperatures, snow, indoor activities and an increase in the spread of germs. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), cold and flu season typically peaks in the United States between December and February.2

A survey conducted by Wakefield Research (sponsored by GOJO Industries) revealed some startling facts about how Americans handle illness during the winter germ season:

Sixty-nine percent (69 percent) of working Americans don't take sick days because they don't want to miss a day of work, even if they're actually sick3;

Sixty-two percent (62 percent) of working Americans have gone to work sick3;

Nearly three in four parents have sent their children to school sick3; and

Sixty percent (60 percent) of those surveyed saw their co-worker sneeze without using a tissue.3

According to the CDC, approximately 80 percent of infectious diseases are transmitted by touch4 and the CDC recommends hand hygiene as one of the most important steps to avoid getting sick and spreading germs to others.5 In fact, results from the Wakefield Research Survey showed that of those who didn't get sick last winter-germ season, the majority of them, 67 percent, said hand hygiene is the reason why.3

"This survey highlights that hand hygiene must be practiced far more thoroughly and regularly – whether it's at home, in the office or on the go," said Jim Arbogast, Ph.D., Vice President of Hygiene Sciences and Public Health Advancements, GOJO Industries. "Keeping hands clean by either washing with soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, like PURELL® Advanced Hand Sanitizer, should be second nature for all of us. It's a simple and effective way to prevent you and your family from getting sick and spreading illness-causing germs to others."

The CDC recommends washing hands with soap and water and when soap and water are not available to use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with at least 60 percent alcohol to reduce germs on hands and decrease the spread of illness-causing germs.5

It is important to remember the key moments for practicing hand hygiene. These include:

Before and after preparing food,

Before eating,

Before and after caring for someone that is sick or around someone who is ill,

After using the bathroom,

After sneezing or coughing,

After touching anything that is in a high-traffic area that may have been touched by many different hands, such as the grocery cart handle, a phone or a handrail.

For more surprising facts about how Americans handle illness during cold and flu season, view our infographic, Germ Alert: Your Co-Worker Might Not Call In Sick.

ABOUT GOJOGOJO Industries, Inc. (www.gojo.com) is the inventor of PURELL® Advanced Instant Hand Sanitizer, and the leading global producer and marketer of skin health and hygiene solutions for away-from-home settings. The broad GOJO product portfolio includes hand cleaning, hand washing, hand sanitizing and skin care formulas under the GOJO®, PURELL® and PROVON® brand names. GOJO formulations use the latest advances in the science of skin care and sustainability. GOJO is known for state-of-the-art dispensing systems, engineered with attention to design, sustainability and functionality. GOJO programs promote healthy behaviors for hand hygiene, skin care and compliance in critical environments. GOJO is a privately held corporation headquartered in Akron, with offices in the United Kingdom, France, Australia, Japan and Brazil.

ABOUT THE SURVEY The survey was conducted by Wakefield Research among 1,000 nationally representative U.S. adults aged 18+, between Jan. 22 and Feb. 2, 2015.

Results of any sample are subject to sampling variation. The magnitude of that variation is measurable and is affected by the number of interviews conducted. For the interviews conducted, the chances are 95 in 100 that a survey result does not vary, plus or minus, by more than 3.1 percentage points from the result that would be obtained if interviews had been conducted with all persons in the universe represented by the sample.